You can use a sieve if the solid is in the form of large particles. Otherwise filter paper can work nicely.
In addition distillation could be used, where the liquid is evaporated and then condensed in another container, thus leaving the solid behind.
If the solid is magnetic then a magnet could be used to pull the solid out from the liquid.
Some procedures are:
- filtering
- decantation
- crystallization
- centrifugation
- freeze-drying
- evaporation (distillation) and condensation
- fluid-bed drying
- spray drying
Separating a solid from a liquid takes the process of filtration. Sedimentation is another process where a solid is taken from a liquid.Ê
distillation In the dairy business its called skimming.
by the process of sedimentation & filtration
filtration
centrifugation-small,insoluble solids from liquid
sedimentation and decantation
decanting
Liquidation
the 2 liquids on the periodic table are Mercury (Hg) and Bromine (Br)
i think all the liquids will melt at the same speed but it depends on the viscosity of the liquid. If salt water is one of your liquids I think salt water will melt the fastest because salt melts ice. From C00kie_cream
Yes, a solid, liquid, gas as well as the other states of matter all occupies space. 2. But the space occupied by gases and liquids is not necessarily of fixed dimensions.
Supervisor - I am leaving this question but it needs clarification please. There is just not enough information to answer.
Solids and liquids are difficult compress. Gases, however, are easy; they respond to changes in temperature and volume.
Yes, separation of two liquids by distillation is a physical change. It involves the process of heating a mixture of liquids to vaporize one of the components, and then condensing the vapor back into a liquid form. This process does not involve any chemical reactions or changes in the chemical composition of the substances.
Distillation for the two soluble liquids (which seperates them by their boiling point) and magnetism for the separation of iron pins and sand.
In most cases, two mixed liquids can best be separated by the process of distillation, in which the liquid with the lower boiling point is boiled off and collected as vapor, and it can then condense back into a liquid. It is also possible to separate two mixed liquids by cooling them to the point that one of the liquids freezes; no two liquids would have exactly the same freezing point, just as they do not have exactly the same boiling point (of course, if the freezing points or the boiling points are very close, that makes the separation process harder).
The answer is simple: it is easy to separe liquids with very different boiling points.
yes they can but there are many liquids that do that
Iron Curtain
isolation due to population groups reproducing at different times.
in general, polar liquids are miscible with other polar liquids but are not miscible with nonpolar liquids.
Segregation is separation:1. The act of segregating, or the state of being segregated; separation from others; a parting.2. (Science: geology) separation from a mass, and gathering about centers or into cavities at hand through cohesive attraction or the crystallizing process.3. (genetic) the formation of unique gametes from the genotype of the parents.
Segregation is separation:1. The act of segregating, or the state of being segregated; separation from others; a parting.2. (Science: geology) separation from a mass, and gathering about centers or into cavities at hand through cohesive attraction or the crystallizing process.3. (genetic) the formation of unique gametes from the genotype of the parents.
Cytokinesis
These liquids can be separated by distillation.